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tv   Witness Finding Selam  Al Jazeera  November 14, 2020 9:00am-10:01am +03

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would benefit by the abuse of power and jolo hunt for a fugitive on a just, you know i'm home ahead. zena, doha, with the top stories on just 0. u.s. president donald trump has said mrs. he may not speak, leading the country's next administration. he's also suffered another legal setback, a pennsylvania court threw out 5 republican lawsuits alleging voting irregularities, speaking publicly for the 1st time since joe biden was named president elect. alan fischer reports from washington d.c. incredibly. this is become a real thing. public remarks by donald trump. his 1st since the election, and this was about protecting his legacy. but ministration has initiated the single
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greatest mobilization. in u.s. history, pioneering developing and manufacturing therapies and vaccines. in record time, there was no talk of the election result. this was an update on the fight against corona virus, the hope provided by a vaccine. but there was almost the slip almost an acknowledgment. his time in the white house was coming to a close. ideally, we won't go to a lockdown. i will not go, this administration will not be going to a lockdown. hopefully the, the, whatever happens in the future, who knows which of ministration will be, i guess time will tell. but i can tell you this administration will not go to a lockdown. the president has been adamant, he continues to fight in the courts to overturn an election. he claims without evidence was stolen from him, but he's running out of route. his campaign has dropped, its action in arizona with joe biden has been declared. the winner cases in michigan and pennsylvania have run into legal difficulties. law teams have quit the
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fight because lawsuits being dismissed by judges who seem quite exasperated with lawyers representing the trump campaign. who simply do not have facts. the president's own cyber security experts have declared the election to be the most secured in american history. something the president was keen to take credit for while at the same time, claiming it had been rigged by the democrats against him. another sign, the white house is moving towards acceptance of the result from monday, joe biden will start receiving the daily intelligence briefing. something the trumpet ministration, have blocked since the election. biden campaign's reaction about time passing day, lack of access to current classified operations or back channel conversations that are happening really put the american people's interest is at least in their national security risk. donald trump is arguably the most accessible president in modern history. but he left the rose garden, refusing to be questions about the election result. and if his days in the white
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house were numbered, alan fischer, al-jazeera washington. the united nations says it's concerned war crimes may have been committed in ethiopia's, northern tigre, a region where government troops are battling local fighters. the 10 day conflict has already killed hundreds of people. thousands more. a flight to sit on. rival factions in libya have agreed to hold nationwide elections in december of next year . the date is considered a sign of progress from talks in neighboring china's ear. that's where 75 libyan delegates have been the go see to a road map of civil war a 30 year ceasefire in the volatile western sahara region could be in jeopardy. morocco says a pro independence group has blocked the main roads, and the army has moved in to stop them. the polar sario front says morocco has ignited war. azerbaijan isn't forced a curfew in areas that is captured in the go in a car,
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but it comes ahead of armenia's handover of lands to azerbaijan. so i think armenians of set fire to their former homes as they flee the area. zambia may become the 1st african nation to default on its debt repayments. during the coronavirus pandemic, the international monetary fund says it's now in talks to address the debt. on friday, zambia said it would not pay an interest payment of more than $42000000.00. creditors are rejecting the country's request for a 6 month extension. and shelling between indian and pakistani troops says, killed several people, including soldiers on both sides of the disputed region of kashmir. india and pakistan are accusing each other of violating a long standing ceasefire. that's your state's stay with us now to syria. witness is next.
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ready i have it here from devon lad who sent them at some time of my view. ted, i have always had what does take an angle, but sometimes it's sometimes some time and some tough taskmaster. yeah, i mean, afford a
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ghost which may v.o.p. and elders open the doors to their country's past for me through their tears. i began to understand the promise and the agony that is ethiopia of it. for me to go back to i tend to assume that this will become and i've been, it's been in my mind, this is almost a move rather than have them go sort of, i just, i'm at the door the minute i'm out and they say, you know, ask a dumb waiter might also know my justice
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acne, ethiopia, and then i team seventies was a country at war with itself. an ancient land led by a powerful emperor that was being challenged by students who wanted greater freedoms years of terror would soon follow under military dictatorship, erasing entire generation of young people. like most ethiopians, my relatives has stayed silent about this dark era where nearly every family was
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affected by the disappearances and killings. i grew up in canada, shrouded in my family's collective silence. and raised by my canadian mother. ethiopia was a far off and mystical land that i knew little about and didn't visit until there was an adult. but for some many, it seems that it's safer to forget and then to remember. and there's so much trauma attached to their memories. at my grandmother's house, i was confronted with a new revelation. i noticed a photo prominently set above the fireplace of a beautiful woman. i had another aunt, one that no one had ever mentioned. her name was alemao it,
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sally or salaam for short, meaning peace. how could there be a close relative that i knew nothing about? i have 4 other aunts who have grown closer to chambre is my aunt who's lived in ethiopia and the longest. she's trained as an artist and hasn't painted in many years. has warned me that i will need a lot of patience to dig into sally's past really and set you off. what is really what is this these brushes? i don't think you'll find them here. my favorite cocked.
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it's so beautiful. to see some last film. you just have to paint. absolutely. but i will tell you how to fight. i think from my height, the minute i met the love i see on every tired teacher is the youngest sister. like the rest of my family. she's dealt with a lot of loss in her life, and yet somehow she manages to persevere and i'm
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99 minutes. and i know that asking her about the past will not be easy. i always felt like a foreigner wherever i was. i'm a seed by the locals here. i've seen a supporter, but it's not a bad thing. i don't think any of the derelict family has ever felt ethiopian, because we moved so much as children and my parents never said, or we have to move again. it was never like that it was here, we get to move again and so you could put me just about anywhere and i think i'd be ok to go yet again in my life. not most of the time, but most of us and what i know, but i'm too we're jewish, much that i'm gonna retaliate. the elder sister a banker has spent her entire career building. the financial systems in ethiopia
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now retired. she hopes to become a voice for the people through her new t.v. talk show. what about the others? topics that have been assented to the accent other topics. do i give you the topics we want to do corruption, it's becoming very obvious. we need very little to specially government offices, so we're going to try to bring the issue out in the community. can discuss about robin anything you say can be considered inciting violence or upright. so literally your report can put you by words because people get angry in your insight, your insight. we have to be very careful, but that's what the show is all about. there's no problem talking to them. it's how you approach them and what you say period
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maybe is he and i know best as she lived in canada for many years. she's recently retired in ethiopia, after years of work for the united nations members to keep her of all the family stories. and she often tells a labrat tell us about her childhood. these were all things that my father who passed away nearly a decade ago, had never spoken about. i remember learning a lot about the family from you when i was a kid. but why do you think i never even knew that sally existed until i was 330. i don't know because he's a normal family home loons who, i mean there was a lot of time that we did spend together. so i think it's, it's a timing issue for my father remarried when i was
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a young child and then slowly faded out of my life. any relationship or information i had about his family was through my own persistance to connect i felt closest to mama so high my late grandmother as painful as it was for mama to speak of sally before she died. she gave me her blessing to explore her daughter's story. my father was the only son swallowed in a family of sisters. he grew up with his siblings in sudan, ghana, in nigeria, in the privilege household of an ethiopian diplomat. my mom who was very busy taking care of 6 kids running the household. and as a wife of a diplomat, she had a lot of responsibilities going to all those cocktails is a big responsibility. having cocktails at home is it because one's ability?
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my dad hit her in his job. you couldn't touch him when it came to politics, history, geography, languages. you couldn't touch it. he was brilliant. and we talk about political things with general political issues. he was deep in that and we were deep in that too because we were surrounded by his job. if you're living in an embassy, doesn't really mean you have a lot of money. you just have a lot of privileges. my grandfather spent his entire career serving the people, and the emperor haile, selassie the emperor, had in fact, fostered my grandfather and his brothers. after their and father had passed away. i remember him coming off the plane and i speak right at the bottom of the stairs and handing him the flowers. i remember there was a hard line in
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a bit ites bedroom, that only the emperor called on. so i knew he was important in what was sally like as a child when you were young together. extremely fun. loving chad. a lot of friends. she was popular. she was very kind, gentle. but really, really fun loving. she loved partying. you know, sally was not overweight. she loved everything. she loved miniskirts very, very fashionable, short skirts looked really, really good on her. she had a laugh that could shatter a window and she used it lots. she was very clever, very politically astute because she was brighter. she was very entertaining. in the summer of 1968, the family was on the meth, once again,
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leaving africa for the 1st time to open a new embassy in canada. it was very interesting for us in the street because we would identify every black person instantly and almost count who were there look over there is like, oh hi. there were very few, very shortly after we got there, we're a people even asked us if we were the supremes because we had bigger fruit 17 year old sally was involved at carleton university to study sociology. while her younger siblings attended liger collegiate institute. and i remember of one of the parties that my parents had been invited to trudeau peer who was dancing with my mom was saying, i've heard about all your beautiful daughters. you have a beautiful daughter and he was referring to my mother. my father was not impressed, and he very quickly said that my wife after 2 years
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in canada, the embassy was closed, and my grandfather was reposed it to sudan in order for his children to complete their education. he decided to let them stay behind in canada, renting a modest apartment in the evening then to adapt to life on their own. in those days, for all our parties and our fun, our conversations were political. people took to the streets to lend their voice to whatever cause issues of racism. we were out south africa. definitely. so we were very involved. and sally, whenever she dated anyone, she fell madly in love with them. and we used to laugh at her because i think if she had to do make a boyfriend and be jamaican food, would have to make a music, jamaican food and clothes. she was very much like she explored,
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like all of she always used to say, i'm going to have 8 kids. and she left kids and had a dream was to have a house with kids. in 1973, ethiopia's, capital addis ababa was a modernizing and bustling city. it was also a country ripe for a revolution. the emperor haile selassie was the 1st last and only law of the land. could you please explain your position was to have predecessors. i hope and i think these are one of the last years of jewish to see an end to the monarchy. but really, if you know, with the students ethiopian students have been protesting. since the late 1960 s. in many were being jailed now fully understanding the level of tension in the
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country, my answer arrived 1st summer vacation, courtesy of their father, who wanted his foreign raised daughters to know their roots. this trip will change the fate of my family forever. their way of life and loyalties will be profoundly shaken. having to cope. yeah. it was just so much fun. i think it's the 1st time that we discovered we were ethiopians. sally found a very nice group of friends, political, but that was the way we grew up. so it was more of a continuation of what we were doing in ottawa. but it was a much more close issue because you're sort of right in the middle of it here.
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and you knew these people and you heard it. so in that way it was much more involving also for sally. so she just wanted to stay on should finished university and she was interested to try it out here. sally, an idealist, was attracted to a new group of friends who were members of the ethiopian people's revolutionary, party, the e.p.i., arche, and underground communist organization. one of their leaders, so lota became sally's new boyfriend, a committed student revolutionary from a working class family. or sally had been schooled in diplomacy solo to have been in and out of jail as a political activist. if that had already led to look at watching him in the political end of the limiter, so minimum a shade of no school, no to go to beaches though. so most of us to literally to see mr. mayor this summer
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. and then again, it seems that the think of the telemetry down to the e.p.a. or people worked with the student and labor movement and embraced communism as a way to confront the imperial government. many believed that arms struggle was the only way to create the democratic change that they were hungry for that brought them well. one up on the morning in 1974, the university students started exposing the cover up of the 1st major famine in
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ethiopia to be shown to the world on television, outraged by the suffering of their people. sally and her friends took part in protests in the capital. they were soon joined by bacon ploys, taxi drivers, teachers, and other groups, demanding democratic reforms. the family is devastated, of course, and perhaps the answer to that. and i think there was answer that was given, that the famine was conceived. it wasn't told to the emperor. we don't know if that's true or not, but the point is it shouldn't have been so devastating. i guess what really brought it in tonight. it's also the television show itself was shown internationally. very bad,
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very sad. the emperor tried to make concessions, but he was unwilling to make any real change as a result, soldiers started to mutiny, agitating for their own issues. well, well, well, i love that one. love not one man, not involved, not involved. and out of this, a committee of lower ranking officers emerged called the derg. they took control of the country and removed the emperor from power. on september 12th 1974, the end game was warning of the armed forces, which had already spread out of his power was all over. i don't think i would for once
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that was last rumor has it that he will suffocate to die such a miserable death. i wouldn't wish it on anybody to derg saw itself as a guardian of the revolution. quickly stealing the momentum from the young people whose energy had driven the uprising to consolidate power during the executed 60 called counter-revolutionaries. these were high ranking officials of the previous regime. many of whom were friends or coworkers of my grandparents. he said he's, but it's up to get back to ethiopia. and he was telling
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us he's going to go back. and we all said you shouldn't. and he said i have become everything wrong. so i'm going up in the dirt took over, they called all ambassadors back to went back. one was and the dirt wanted to use him as the face that people could look at and trust. a man known for his dedication to the country by placing him as minister of interior affairs. and it was like a way for them to do all the terrible things that they could behind us face. that's all that was. and he said no because he had got you don't say no to the dark. but when they wanted, they just come right to the house and ask him questions because they didn't know
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a lot of things about ethiopia's involvement in the international arena. after killing those who challenge his authority in a shootout, colonel maginnis to haile mariam emerged as the leader. every theo, pia's military government minister, was using communism as a means to solidify his power by gaining support from the soviet union. his vision of a marxist state had little in common with sally's the coed so successful was that it was the you know, when you rule with the power of the gun and you have a lot of power, then you can be as the ruthless as you want to be and they were as ruthless as you could be. if you want to create something, you 1st, break it and then you remolded. that's what they did with your first point towards
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the family break, the ties in the family, push people to accuse each other. tell things about each other means to point became to do the hand of justice. so i could easily say, i heard her said to the government has been in the market. i would need to see and you'd be gone. in the 2nd bars of identity of exile, nephew council travels to the middle east to retrace his steps housed in a refugee rise baha of the world's palestinian population and see the conflict through the eyes of those who live it. it breaks my heart to see this man who's been like a father to yearn for a place that he may never see. i don't mean it is real and make me go out about my
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country. correspondence gang life. this was our foundation. i tried to do some different and when i met daisy, it was the best day of my life. i wish that day could have gone on forever. but my past caught up with me and made us all pay the price daisy and knocks on al-jazeera. from our coverage of africa is what i'm most proud of. every time i travel bad, whether it's east or west africa, people stop me and tell me how much they appreciate our coverage. and our focus is not just on their suffering, but also on the more uplifting and inspiring stories. people trust our jiffy and to tell them what's happening in their communities in a clear and biased way. and as an african,
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i couldn't be more proud to be automated. the old car. i'm hala mohit c n, n. so how would the headlines on al-jazeera u.s., president donald trump has admitted that he may not speak leading the country's next administration. he's also suffered another legal setback after a pennsylvania courts threw out filing for public and will suit alleging voting irregularities in speaking publicly for the 1st time since joe biden was named, president elect. what year in his press conference title, trump updated americans on his response to the coronavirus pandemic. according to some estimates, a national lockdown cost $50000000000.00 a day and hundreds of thousands of jobs every single day. ideally, we won't go to
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a lockdown. i will not go disadvantaged as you will not be going to a lockdown. hopefully the the whatever happens in the future, who knows which of ministration will be, i guess time will tell. but i can tell you this administration will not go to a lockdown. the united nations says it's concerned war crimes may have been committed and ethiopia's, northern tikrit, a region where government troops are battling local fighters, the 10 day conflict has already killed hundreds of people. well, functions more have fled to sit on. rival factions in libya have agreed to hold nationwide elections in december of next year. the date is considered a sign of progress from talks and they bring in his ear. that's for $75.00 libyan delegates have been the goosey, it's in a roadmap. it's a civil war. a 30 year ceasefire in the volatile western sahara region could be in jeopardy, says a poor dependent's group has blocked the main roads,
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and the army has moved in to stop them. the polisario fronts, say morocco has ignited war, azerbaijan has and forced a curfew in areas that is captured in the corner kind of dark. it comes ahead of our media's handover of lands to azerbaijan, some ethnic armenians of set fire to their former homes as they flee the area in spain plans to increase naval patrols around the canary islands. in response to a surge of arrivals from africa, nearly 2000 people have been sleeping rough, a port in gran canaria, because facilities across the islands are stretched to capacity or, and $16000.00 people have made the journey across the atlantic this year, more than 10 times the total from last year, but see up today it's there, it's back to witness and
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sally's devotion to the head only intensified in the face of growing repression. from him, just in dissent was to be quite an anniversary of the revolution. the derm declared a state of emergency saying that anyone who was opposing them was a criminal who could be shot on sight. risking everything. sally pressed on, focusing her energy on empowering women. sally used to be a good friend of mine. he said it was sufficient. i was activist, i came back from europe and when i saw what's going on in ethiopia, the situation, the woman situation in egypt and all this was by letting them use our stock to my
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friends and all this. and i, we need to have some kind of woman, so i'm ization. so one day our common friend introduced me to sally. and from the 3rd stay we saw each other. we clicked and we started talking about how to organize ethiopian women and fight for if they had acquired pay or education. because when she came to ethiopia, when she see those women, when she see those smallish ward boys big for her money, that's what they're all her. i do not think for a minute that she has anybody in for runs at all the military government who was looking for everybody who is not on their side. so they started going from house to house, searching for her for me and sally, had
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a member would have been hiding at her grandma's house and became very dangerous to stay. they have to had to flee. they were becoming very secretive. they don't want to talk to people, they don't want to be seen with anybody. and sally's appearance changed because she would not wear the a western type closing. she would say meet me at this place and that place, she was very careful for the family. very careful. that's why she didn't want us to visit her. she did not want to know who the people she was with. so she was protecting the family in that sense. i mean, just who was building it, has an army urging them to fight against the enemies of the revolution. was he named the e.p. r.p. as public enemy number one? blaming them for all the ills of the country. mass arrests,
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disappearances and killings followed. many of sally's comrades were targeted in what and left him to right. we see people dying on the street. when you are in that kind of situation, you know, you will be next. you know, your day to actually sell a much name in my name was in one of the lists, the government lists to be cured. so for us it was when one day you know that he would be caught i mean you, what you wanted did what she wanted was not easily influenced by anybody but one she meets and that it was a totally different story. and she told me she was going to get married and i talked to my mom and mom told me she doesn't want the wedding. she doesn't want
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anybody, just the family. and that's not sally. so you must address our have people around her. so that influence was really taking a lot of effect on her lifestyle and on of life as a whole. he was not just an ordinary member. he was one of the decision makers until shriven for her not to be the letter in him analogy for good and no one has. there could be a set then is today design abodes, another lesson seller mode. but i'm to louisiana better myself. like
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this feeling in the national beginning the time when young or similar but there and i don't think was just the husband. i think she also was committed because that's who she was anyway. so i think was a very difficult decision for her. i think i don't know to go underground because we were very close, have been the family was close. we knew that if they catch us, they will kill us. saw i got up in the morning and left there was a law as a choice except leaving the city and getting shelter. and we decided to go to a simba where there is a period of control. and we give secret names so that they don't know
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us by a new source scared and our source scared to make them says fish is that we are not what we at. she had an id as a housewife. we were sure that they are going to catch us when we came out from the baths, it was very hard to walk through the countryside that she adapted even better than me because to be there and to help the people was the most important for her that there was a period of but you know what? we always think the cause is be got at than anything. people die for their cause. sally had disappeared. we don't know where she was. we don't know if she was alive . that was when they came, and when you see the military come anywhere close to you,
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it's like something's going to happen. they said they know where my sister is. and i said, i don't know where she is because i didn't know. so they took me to the house, she used to live. that was my grandmother's house. and they told my grandmother bring sally out right now. sally was not there. sally hasn't been there in a long time. and then they said ok, they're going to take me and if you can't bring sally, they literally threw me in the van and i just sat there. and i said one thing to myself, nobody was country, nobody would touch my body. when i 1st saw, this is the house. i look at it now. so quiet the entrance to something you absolutely don't know too afraid to ask where you're out.
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they brought me here and this whole place was bloody. when you see the blood you say is going to be my blood on that wall too. it's eerie. it makes no sense. we also many people like that. people have become crippled mentally. physically. you know, they're picking up from the street. you pick out from your home and bring you here for interrogation. and then this is not the only place where they kept what you called prisoners or suspects. there are no old all over the city. so all these
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young people, in most cases they may not be free like i was i went home, i was lucky sally was she? she never come back home. i know she was with her husband not all the time in the same place, but she met with him. what was she thinking, what was she doing? i didn't know the military was getting stronger and stronger. so all of us, there is a military training, a military training is truly living in a hard to ship and we knew how to or should to just to protect ourselves.
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after she went underground. and one morning i found a letter in my mailbox. i found it on my way through arc, and there was an article about sandy she was wanted dead or alive. and in that article they had mentioned the fact that some members of the a.p. r.p. had loaned the orly effort. and she was the one who did it responded to the government crackdowns by trying to assassinate key leaders, including just somehow i wasn't surprised to find out that sally had taken part in response to military government called for the public to join its mass killings, free name in the campaign, the red tear bodies
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of countless people were left on the street for all to see forbidden to mourn. frightened and grieving, relatives were forced to pay the price of every bullet used to kill their loved ones. as a result of the red terror period, an entire generation of urban youth with it, at least a minimal education were lost. their remainder. that's so afraid that for decades, no expression of just sense occurred. my grandparents survived this dark period searching desperately for their daughter trying to avoid the daily tears. they wouldn't get any new information about sally for nearly any other 10 years. not knowing whether she was dead or i'm not. it's really painful.
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we asked a lot of people and we had a friend who works for the state department, and he would come and say, you know, we have some if you have people arriving in california arriving in atlanta. so every time he says that, we try to find out if she's one of them. we heard once that she had gone to sudan. so we said correctly look far. i don't think she was dead until they told us why would she die? i never, ever, ever thought she was dead. i thought they were still doing it. they're saying trying to come back to the government despite this. i think she had passed away 5 years earlier and i was a satisfied having no contacts with
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my husband, jim passed away march 27th 84. he was driving to meet me when he got into a car accident that week was when we found out that he had passed the same week in what were you told then or what you know now that has she passed away she was ill and then her husband dying very soon after him a shock. but she died from health problems not to not warfare. how did the news of her death affect your parents? they were both there a place where they lost a daughter and lost her and then they lost her finally.
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force even d. for mission. the chick passed away. it was easier by far than not knowing. the not knowing is much more painful than having something in front of you that now you have to come to grips with. but you know, we still didn't have very much information. they've showed us the picture of sally's human perception. so it was a very painful thing for her that she couldn't even find. now that she knew sally passed away, she couldn't even find the grave site. you couldn't even see was the ones you know to this day. i really don't know how she died. which seems to be able to tell me exactly how she packed
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that's where they said that they were doing some military and just to say you do? i hope this is good, wonderful to talk to the people who've lived here. those who are from crime don't have to have a look . see at the rules, where are you going?
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yeah. you know, out with marty, get what he did you man or you know, even i would take monday a meeting that her night to come in and then the next night you know, how are you and you know, any of them belong to one of us. you can get us to meet him in the average. he climate of caution that i give it that area. you know again in particular,
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if i can get a tight you do yet you do it up to our own lucky dog. he would give it a try and i thought i didn't do as him, but they did. he see and get out of my d.s. looked into the arena. mr. xi. even a block side movie. yeah. he was lucky. you know how to be ok. did we move to iraq? you need humanity to give it up to good and how do i manage to survive? when in a headline i let god to show you. why had i been mog, i had there would be creativity and used to work
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around you know i managed to get america to do with e.q. . i took the i don't know now. well tough talk with johnny tied to what i've decided 30 is great. a little tour of turn, a total of 2 would it took all right, or you or your all got over to i'm sorry. you see i managed to run there in boulder. i mean, i thought, you know, that's the moment the lady just told us that sally passed right here. they must have taken her out of her mom. put her one peaceful and she was buried. property. she said so many people died over there in washington
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by vultures. she must have gotten some kind of infection entirely possible. they didn't have water for washing or well that's very possible to look at that was just to call her to look like mrs. the elder one, the big one i mean i'm next to look. c c
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i was not there when she died, but the next dad and i after she'd and have when he was busted. because i know people when they are at they get sick. some of them when they get to really sick, they send them to some guy. sally, if she gets sick, oh my god, surely they would have sent me to tell you that it was just sat inside and nobody knows what it was. but people around her they were saying, given until day and night until the last minute they said she was stalking issues alive and everybody knew was highly so and she died have to buy care from everywhere. we cried and complained to kite they cherished was so good for us and their priests. and we buried her baked
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but as if she was who he was and not to send them out with another look through. it was enough to know just then
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when i found out that sally and solo to have shared a grave, i worked tremendously with the church to have a memorial stone built for them. and for all the other young people who died in that region. i think that's what my grandparents would have wanted for me, sally, is the gateway into understanding the complicated history of ethiopia, my family's story, as well as the contemporary events case. i wonder though with sally
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fits into today's ethiopia, would she still be fighting the questions raised by sally and her comrades may be different from those of young people today. but i know many of the values she risked her life for i just as important. i hope that a new generation of leaders can inspire the unity that sally dreamed of. i hope that from years of bitterness, death and corruption that every new can arise. as a rebirth from the ashes of the old how does one forgave after losing 32 family members in a heinous massacre? a survivor of one of colombia's 50 year long conflicts, worst atrocities,
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dedicates his life to reconciliation with his peace falters around him. lean upon last year as life or mission are in jeopardy. witness buckeye are caught in the crossfire on al jazeera when the news breaks apart from when people need to be heard. and the story needs to be told. that's why they have increased testing in areas with a high infection rate. with exclusive interviews and in-depth reports, people here tell us they are desperate. here at home, al-jazeera has teens on the ground kind of loves to impart the 2nd hour to bring you more award winning documentaries and life news. hello, the rain is finally coming sized in the forms,
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i think of regular showers every time a trough goes through. so there may well be showers, for example, in the car on saturday, busy change of weather type. so we're going to get used to this a windy and potentially shared a least the start on saturday, then things go back to normal. and easing wind inquired whether, but there's another thing developing in the eastern med that will start to bring rain into the levant into syria. and of course, that then should go east was to join its cousin, which on sunday is to producing right northern pakistan and snow. further north than that, and the high ground of parts of afghanistan as well. the seasonal rain, the snow, almost its lowest or for this south extent extends from the tanzanian coasts, more or less back towards further south into angola, recto you guinea, and you'll notice it doesn't really look particularly wet now. and sasa generally, nor should it be, but it's hardly bone dry, no continuously dry. no towns day is the focus of decent rains and dar's to lands
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that shows up has been moderate to heavy. now we've got 3 days of light right now that rain goes beyond angola in fact, into northern namibia wouldn't. who'll be sharia 30 degrees? i think the 1st saturday and probably some day dissecting the headlines in the midst of a pandemic. let's start with some of the on the ground realities affecting the news coverage. what's the lay of the land there? stripping away the spam eclipsing, still worry about presidential corruption. it is real reporting. it's not if you keep challenging assumptions and the official line. all this talk of a greenie to tell our story. look, we don't want to lie on the authority and it's vilest. post on out is the right
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al-jazeera. where every if you piers human rights commission is sending a team to investigate mass killings in the 2 gray region. hello, i'm adrian for the good. this is al jazeera live from go. also coming up ethnic albanians leave parts of the god of color back and drove for it's handed over to azerbaijan. baracoa launches a military operation in the west into harbor, up ending a near 30 year old cease fire. whatever happens in the future, who knows which.

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